All posts tagged: ATT

Former cyber executive turned whistleblower accuses IBM of covering up several data breaches

Former cyber executive turned whistleblower accuses IBM of covering up several data breaches

A former IBM cybersecurity executive accused the company of getting hacked three times in the previous decade by foreign governments and then covering up the breaches.  In a lawsuit unsealed this week but filed in 2020, William Barlow, who was IBM’s vice president of threat intelligence until August 2019, said IBM concluded Chinese hackers breached its core network between 2013 and 2016 but that the company then covered up the breaches and never disclosed them. Barlow also said at least two IBM subsidiaries were also breached, and that IBM covered up those breaches as well. Barlow alleged in his complaint that IBM’s core network was “routinely hacked by foreign state actors and others,” adding that data was frequently stolen and government agencies were “never notified.”  While the alleged breaches date back more than a decade, the news shows that cyberattacks, even those affecting large public tech companies such as IBM, sometimes never get disclosed, either to the public or to relevant government authorities. IBM is a major cybersecurity vendor to the U.S. federal government, which …

AT&T Shook Up Its Unlimited Phone Plans. Here’s What You’re Paying For

AT&T Shook Up Its Unlimited Phone Plans. Here’s What You’re Paying For

In just the past few months, AT&T has overhauled its unlimited phone plans with 2.0 versions, added a new top-tier option and introduced a modular option for new customers who want only the basics. The 150-year-old company also hiked the prices of some now-retired plans in what appears to be a move to encourage customers to jump to the latest options, and changed the prices of some plans even since their introduction. If you’re an AT&T customer suddenly bombarded by notifications about upgrading, or you’re looking to switch from another carrier, here’s a breakdown of the new offerings. These plans replace the AT&T Value Plus VL, Unlimited Extra EL and Unlimited Premium PL plans. The carrier also removed its Unlimited Starter SL plan, which served as the entry-level plan (you had to know where to look to find the limited, but cheaper, Value Plus VL plan). Keep in mind that AT&T plans let each person on an account have their own plan. So you might set up a package where one person has the Premium 2.0 plan for unthrottled 5G speeds and …

Best AT&T Plans: How to Choose and Which Ones to Pick in 2026

Best AT&T Plans: How to Choose and Which Ones to Pick in 2026

“5G” is an umbrella term that encompasses the current fifth-generation cellular wireless network technologies. All major carriers and phones support 5G, which can offer faster data speeds than older technologies such as 4G LTE or 3G. Essentially, there are three types of 5G: Millimeter-wave (mmWave), which can be fast but has limited range; low-band 5G, which has slower speeds but works on a broader range; and midband, which is a balance between the two that’s faster than low-band but also covers a larger range than millimeter-wave. Midband also incorporates C-band, a batch of spectrum auctioned off by the Federal Communications Commission in 2021. Your phone’s 5G connection depends on which type blankets the area you’re in, as well as other factors, such as population density and infrastructure. For instance, mmWave is super fast, but its signals can be thwarted by buildings, glass, leaves or being inside a structure. When your device is connected to a 5G network, it may appear as several variations, such as 5G, 5G Plus, 5G UW or others, depending on the carrier. Here’s a list of icons you …

AT&T will give you the new Razr+ flip phone for under  a month – no trade-in required

AT&T will give you the new Razr+ flip phone for under $5 a month – no trade-in required

Cesar Cadenas/ZDNET Memorial Day weekend is here, and the phone deals are rolling in. Right now at AT&T, both new and existing customers can get the 2026 Motorola Razr+ for just $4.43 per month — a significant drop from its regular $29.03 monthly price. Also: The best Memorial Day phone deals: Save big on Samsung, Google, Apple and more To take advantage of the offer, you’ll need to purchase the phone online through AT&T’s digital storefront. No trade-in is required. New customers simply need to add a new line on an installment plan and sign up for an eligible unlimited plan. Existing AT&T customers can score the same discount by adding a new line. According to AT&T, the promotion saves buyers an additional $200 on the foldable phone.  One thing worth noting is that the Razr+ 2026 is available only in a single configuration: 256GB of storage and in Pantone Mountain Trail, which is a deep forest green. The 2026 Razr+ sits right in the middle of Motorola’s latest flip phone series, offering many of the …

I measured 5G signals of AT&T, T-Mobile, and Verizon in a small town – here’s what the data says

I measured 5G signals of AT&T, T-Mobile, and Verizon in a small town – here’s what the data says

Adam Doud/ZDNET Follow ZDNET: Add us as a preferred source on Google. ZDNET’s key takeaways I tested 5G on country roads and farmland for three days. Verizon led in overall network levels, followed by AT&T and T-Mobile. T-Mobile was the only network to pull in a 5G signal. My quest to test 5G has taken me to a baseball game and interstates between Chicago and Nashville. Through the journey, I’ve carried three phones from the three major US carriers to determine which has the best coverage. I just did it again, but I changed some things up. Also: I compared Verizon, T-Mobile, and AT&T 5G coverage on a road trip – and the winner surprised me I still packed my car for a weekend away, and I still had three phones riding in the back seat. I used nPerf (more on that later) to continuously test carrier and network performance throughout the journey. But this time, I went a little John Denver on you and stuck to those old country roads. Interstates were off the menu. …

AT&T Shook Up Its Unlimited Phone Plans. Here’s What You’re Paying For

AT&T Revamped Its Unlimited Phone Plans. Here’s How They Compare

AT&T switched out its unlimited data phone plans with new 2.0 versions that end up including more features and costing less than the old plans when you add in a recent price hike on retired plans. But that wasn’t enough, apparently, because the 150-year-old company also just added a brand-new tier for customers who don’t mind paying extra. If you’re an AT&T customer suddenly bombarded by notifications about upgrading, or you’re looking to switch from another carrier, here’s a breakdown of the new offerings. These plans replace the AT&T Value Plus VL, Unlimited Extra EL and Unlimited Premium PL plans. The carrier also removed its Unlimited Starter SL plan, which served as the entry-level plan (you had to know where to look to find the limited, but cheaper, Value Plus VL plan). Keep in mind that AT&T plans let each person on an account have their own plan. So you might set up a package where one person has the Premium 2.0 plan for unthrottled 5G speeds and another, such as a child, is set …

New AT&T Elite 2.0 Phone Plan Boosts Wireless Hotspot and Data Performance

New AT&T Elite 2.0 Phone Plan Boosts Wireless Hotspot and Data Performance

Only a few weeks after overhauling its unlimited phone plans, AT&T has added a new plan to the top of the lineup that offers more data and performance — for a higher price. The AT&T Elite 2.0 plan is available now. For a single line, Elite 2.0 costs $110 (plus taxes and fees). As more lines are added, the per-line price goes down. AT&T customers can mix and match plans on an account, but if we assume everyone is signing up for the Elite 2.0 plan, the costs break down like this: • One line: $110• Two lines: $100 per line, $200 total• Three lines: $85 per line, $255 total• Four lines: $75 per line, $300 total• Five lines: $75 per line, $375 total To compare it with AT&T’s next-priciest option, the Premium 2.0 plan costs $90 for a single line, or $55 per line on an account with four lines. What’s included in the AT&T Elite 2.0 plan For those amounts, the plan includes unlimited high-speed 5G data, prioritized even during network congestion, just like …

The Sneaky Way AT&T Is Hiking Rates on Legacy Customers This Month

The Sneaky Way AT&T Is Hiking Rates on Legacy Customers This Month

The upcoming billing cycle is about to get more expensive for long-term AT&T wireless phone plan customers. While the carrier is shifting its focus to newer “2.0” service tiers, those holding onto older unlimited contracts are being hit with a mandatory monthly surcharge starting this month. The logic behind the price jump feels inconsistent, as the specific dollar amount varies wildly across different generations of retired plans. On a support page that went live when it announced its revamped “2.0” unlimited phone plans, the carrier revealed that the prices of its “retired” unlimited wireless plans — the ones customers who haven’t upgraded are still using — will go up by as much as $20 starting in April.  AT&T is implementing two price changes. If your account with a “retired” plan has a single line, the price goes up $10. If you have two or more lines on an account, the price increase is capped at $20 for the account. Perhaps to offset the sting, affected plans will get an extra 20GB of high-speed hotspot data each month.  However, not everyone …

I compared Verizon, T-Mobile, and AT&T 5G coverage on a road trip – and the winner surprised me

I compared Verizon, T-Mobile, and AT&T 5G coverage on a road trip – and the winner surprised me

Adam Doud/ZDNET Follow ZDNET: Add us as a preferred source on Google. ZDNET’s key takeaways My 5G road trip tests included rigorous testing on three Google Pixel phones. Signal reliability generally proved good to decent across three major interstate carriers. Network architecture, including non-standalone 5G, emerged as a factor in deployment. 5G made a number of promises when it debuted. The first was the ability to handle excessive capacity. I tested that promise outside a baseball playoff game this past October, and I found it to be partially true. The other promise was better coverage coast to coast. Now, it was time to head out and give that a try. How 5G could improve coverage outside of city centers.  Also: We ran battery tests on 17 phones – this model lasted the longest To do this, I took those same Google Pixel 10 Pros on a road trip across the most boring highway in America (and, thankfully, a different highway home) through the bulk of central Indiana and Illinois. I also passed through parts of Kentucky and …

The Sneaky Way AT&T Is Hiking Rates on Legacy Customers This Month

AT&T Raising Prices for Legacy Unlimited Plans Starting in April 2026

Last week, AT&T introduced its newly revamped unlimited phone plans, but that’s not the only change to its services lineup. On a support page that went live around the same time, the carrier revealed that the prices of its “retired” unlimited wireless plans — the ones customers who haven’t upgraded are still using — will go up by as much as $20 starting next month.  AT&T is implementing two price changes in April. If your account with a “retired” plan has a single line, the price goes up $10. If you have two or more lines on an account, the price increase is capped at $20 for the account. Perhaps to offset the sting, affected plans will get an extra 20GB of hotspot data each month. AT&T’s support page reads, “This change helps us continue providing reliable network service, quality products, and great customer experiences.” In a statement to CNET, an AT&T spokesperson said, “We recognize that any price increase matters to our customers and their budgets. This increase reflects the real cost of continuing …